A minute more and Cleek was in the
house in the presence of Hammond and Petrie and
Narkom had introduced him as “Monsieur Georges
de Lesparre, a distinguished French criminologist
who had come over to England this morning upon a matter
connected with the French Police Department and who,
in the absence of Mr. Cleek, had consented to take
up this peculiar case.”
“My hat! Wouldn’t
that drive you to drink!” commented Petrie in
a disgusted aside as he eyed this suave and sallow
gentleman with open disapproval. “What
will we be importing from the continent next, Hammond?
As if there aren’t detectives in England good
enough to do the Yard’s work without setting
them to twiddling their blessed thumbs whilst a blooming
Froggie runs the show and beg pardon! what’s
that? Yes, Mr. Narkom. Searched the house
from top to bottom, sir. Nobody in it, and nobody
been here either, sir, not a soul since you left.”
“You are quite sure, monsieur?”
This from Cleek. “About the ’nobody
in the house,’ I mean, of course. You are
quite sure?”
“Of course we’re sure!”
snapped Hammond savagely. “Been from the
top to the bottom of it me and Petrie and
the constable here and not a soul in it
anywhere.”
“Ah, the constable, eh?
You shall tell me, please, Mr. Narkom, is this the
constable who was at the one end of the arch while
the keeper was chasing the man in at the other?
Ah, it is, eh? Well er shall
not we see the keeper, too? I do not find him
about and I should much like to speak with him.
Where is he?”
“Who the keeper?”
said Narkom. “Blest if I know. Is he
about, my lads?”
“No, sir. Ain’t been
about has he, Petrie? for the
Lord knows how long. Never thought of the beggar
until this moment, sir.”
“Nor did I,” said Narkom.
“Come to think of it, I haven’t seen the
fellow since we came to the ‘Y’ of the
road and found those footprints leading here.
No doubt he has gone back to his shelter on the Common
and Monsieur! Why are you
smiling? Good God! you I
Monsieur, shall I send my men for the fellow?
Do you want to see him?”
“Yes, Monsieur Narkom, I want
to see him very, very much indeed if you
can find him! But you can’t, monsieur; and
I fear me that you never will. What you will
find, however, if you will send your men to the shelter
of which you speak will be the real keeper,
either dead or stunned or gagged, and his coat and
hat and badge removed from his body by the man who
personated him.”
“Good heavens above, man, you don’t mean
to say ”
“That you had the real criminal
in your hands and let him go, that you talked with
him, walked with him, were taken in by him, and that
he told you no lie when he said the assassin really
did run into the arch,” replied Cleek
quietly. “It is the old old trick of that
fellow who was called the ‘Vanishing Cracksman,’
my friend: to knock down the fellow who first
gives the alarm, rip off his clothing, and then to
lead the hue and cry until there’s a chance
to steal away unobserved. Send your men to the
keeper’s shelter and see if I have guessed the
truth of that little riddle or not. I’ll
lay you a sovereign, my friend, that your man has
slipped the leash, and it will be but a fluke of fate
if you ever lay hands on him again.”
In a sort of panic Narkom turned to
his men and sent them flying from the house to investigate
this startling assertion; and, turning as they went,
Cleek walked into the room where that awful dead figure
hung. He had taken but one step across the threshold,
however, when he stopped suddenly and began to sniff
the air less to the surprise of Narkom,
who had often seen him do this sort of thing before,
than to Constable Mellish, who stood looking at him
in open-mouthed amazement.
“Good lud, man I
should say, monsieur,” exclaimed the superintendent
agitatedly, “after what you have just hinted,
my head is in a whirl and I am prepared for almost
anything; but surely you cannot find anything suspicious
in the mere atmosphere of the place?”
“No; nothing but what you yourself
must have observed. There is a distinct odour
of violets in the room; so that unless that unhappy
man yonder was of the kind that scents itself, we
may set it down that a woman has been in here.”
“A woman? But no woman
could do a thing like that,” pointing to the
position of the dead man. “Nor,” after
sniffing the air repeatedly, “do I notice anything
of the odour which you speak.”
“Nor me nuther, sir,” put in the constable.
“Still, the odour is here,”
returned Cleek. “And no! it does
not emanate from the dead man. There is scent
on him to be sure, but it is not the scent of violets.
Odours last at best but a little time after the person
bearing them has left the room, and as it must now
be upward of an hour since the discovery of the crime ”
Cleek sucked in his upper lip and
took his chin between his thumb and forefinger and
pinched it hard. What was that that Narkom had
told him regarding Lennard’s startling experience
after he had been left on guard at the old railway
arch? Hum-m-m! Certainly there was one
woman abroad in this neighbourhood to-night, and a
woman decidedly not of the lower classes at
that, as witness the fact that she had worn an ermine
cloak. Certainly, that would point to the wearer
being a woman to whom money was no object and
to Lady Katharine Fordham, with all the great St.
Ulmer wealth behind her, it assuredly was not.
Clearly, then, whoever was or was not the actual perpetrator
of this night’s crime, a woman of the higher
walk of life a rich and fashionable woman,
in fact was in some way connected with
it.
The question was, did Lady Katharine
Fordham possess an ermine cloak? And if she did,
would she be likely to have brought it up from Suffolk
at this time of the year? The curious smile slid
down his cheek and vanished. He turned to Mr.
Narkom, who had been watching him anxiously all the
time.
“Well, my friend, let us poke
about a bit more till your assistants get back from
the shelter on the Common,” he said and dropped
down on his knees, examining every inch of the flooring
with the aid of a pocket torch and a magnifying glass.
For some moments nothing came of this, but of a sudden
Narkom saw him come to an abrupt halt.
Twitching back his head, he sniffed
at the air, two or three times, after the manner of
a hound catching up a lost scent; then he bent over,
brought his nose close to the level of the bare and
dirty boards, sniffed again, blew aside the dust,
and exposed to view a tiny grease spot not bigger
than a child’s thumbnail.
“Huile Violette!”
he said, with a sound as of satisfied laughter in
his voice. “No wonder the scent of violets
lingered. Look! here is another spot and
here another,” he added, blowing the dust away
and creeping on all fours in the direction the perfumed
trail led. “Oh, I know this stuff well,
my friend,” he went on. “For many,
many years its manufacture was a secret known only
to the Spanish monks who carried it with them to South
America and subsequently established in that part of
the country now known as Argentina a monastery celebrated
all over the world as the only source from which this
essential oil could be procured.”
“Argentina?” repeated
Narkom agitatedly. “My dear chap, have you
forgotten that it was in Argentina Lord St. Ulmer spent
those many years of his self-imposed exile? If
then, the stuff is only to be procured there ”
“Gently, gently you
rush at top speed, Mr. Narkom. I said ‘was,’
recollect. It is still the chief point of its
manufacture, but since those days when the Spanish
monks carried it there others have learned the secret
of it, notably the Turks who now manufacture an attar
of violets just as they have for years manufactured
an attar of roses. It is enormously expensive;
for the veriest drop of it is sufficient, with the
necessary addition of alcohol, to manufacture half
a pint of the perfume known to commerce as ‘Extract
of Violet.’ At one time it was a favourite
trick of very great ladies to wear on a bracelet a
tiny golden capsule containing two or three drops
of it and supplied with a minute jewelled stopper
attached to a slender golden chain, which stopper they
occasionally removed for a moment or two that the aroma
of the contents might diffuse itself about them.
I knew one woman and one only who
possessed such a bracelet. You, too, have heard
of her. Whatever her real name may be, she is
simply known to those with whom she associates as
‘Margot.’”
“Scotland! The queen of the Apaches?”
“Yes.”
“You are sure of that?”
“I ought to be. I, myself,
stole the bracelet from the collection of the Comte
de Champdoce and presented it to her. I remember
that the stopper to the capsule was carved from a
single emerald that, owing to its age it
was said to have belonged in its day to Catherine de
Medicis had worn loose, and could only be
prevented from dropping out and allowing the contents
to drip away by wedging it into the orifice in the
capsule by winding the stopper with silk.”
Narkom’s face positively glowed.
“My dear Cleek, you give me
the brightest kind of hope,” he said enthusiastically,
as he stooped and investigated the tiny, perfumed
grease spots on the floor, so clearly made by the dropping
of some oily substance that there could be no question
regarding their origin. “Then, there can
be no possibility of connecting young Geoff Clavering
or the girl he loves with this ghastly business if
that Margot woman has been here, and it was from her
bracelet that these stains were dropped? Besides,
after what you said about that fellow of her crew who
was spiked to the wall as this poor wretch here is ”
“A moment, my friend you
are on the rush again,” interjected Cleek.
“All that we actually know, at present,
Mr. Narkom, is that some one, and very likely a woman,
has been here and unconsciously, of course has
spilled some drops of a very valuable and highly concentrated
perfume. This naturally points to a defective
stopper to the article containing that perfume, but
whether or not that defective stopper was one carved
from a single emerald and wound with silk ”
He stopped and let the rest of the
sentence go by default. All the while he had
been speaking he had been following, after the manner
of a hound on the scent, the trail of that perfume’s
lead; now it had brought him to a litter of rat-gnawed
paper and a parcel containing a peach and the remnants
of a roasted fowl. As if the scent seemed stronger
here than elsewhere so strong, in fact,
that it was suggestive of a goal he began
tossing the scraps about, till at last he gave a sort
of cry and pounced upon something in a distant corner.
“Cleek!” rapped out Narkom
in an excited but guarded tone, as he noted this,
“Cleek, you have found something? Something
that decides?”
“Yes,” the detective made
answer. “Something which proves that, whoever
the woman who dropped the scent may be, Mr. Narkom,
she was not Margot!”
He unclosed his hand and stretched
it out toward the superintendent, and Narkom saw lying
on his palm a crushed and gleaming thing which looked
like a child’s gold thimble that had been trodden
upon. The snapped fragment of a hairlike gold
chain still clung to it, and at the end of this dangled
a liliputian stopper, a wee mite of a thing that was
little more than a short, thick pin of plain, unjewelled,
unornamented gold.
“One of the ‘capsules’
of which I spoke, you see,” said Cleek, “and
bearing not the slightest resemblance to the one belonging
to Margot. The thing has snapped from its fastening
and been trodden upon trodden under a very
heavy foot, I should say, from the condition of it.
There is something engraved upon it, something that
won’t tend to ease your mind, Mr. Narkom.
Take my glass and look at it.”
Narkom did so. Engraved on the
crushed and fragrant-smelling bit of gold he saw a
coat-of-arms arms which he, at least, knew
to be those of the house of St. Ulmer and
under this the name “Katharine.”
“Good Lord!” he said,
and let the crushed bauble fall back upon the palm
from which he had lifted it. “That child that
dear girl who is as much as life itself to young Geoff
Clavering? But how could she a slip
of a girl like that ”
He turned and looked over at the dead
figure spiked to the cottage wall.
Cleek made no reply at
least for the moment. He had gone back to the
“hound’s trick” of sniffing the trail
and was creeping on again past the
litter of papers this time and crawling
on all fours toward the very doorway by which the
police had first gained access to the room.
“Wait! Cross no bridges
until you come to them,” he said at last in an
excited whisper. “Some one who trod upon
that thing passed out this way. I knew
I smelt the oil the very instant I crossed the threshold;
now I can understand why. The assassin left by
the very door you entered, but whether man or woman ”
By now the trail had led him to the
very threshold of the room. Beyond lay the dark
hall by which Narkom and his men had entered the house,
and the light of his upraised electric torch shining
out into that black passage showed him something that
made his pulses leap. It was simply a fragment
of some soft pinkish material, caught and torn off
from a woman’s skirt by a nail head that protruded
above the level of the boarded floor. He rose
and ran out to it; he caught it up and examined it;
then, with a laugh, shut his hand over it and went
hurriedly back to the superintendent’s side.
“Mr. Narkom,” he said,
“tell me something! We have, presumably,
found a perfume receptacle belonging to the Lady Katharine
Fordham; but did you notice can you remember
what manner of frock her ladyship wore at Clavering
Close to-night?”
“I remember it very well indeed.
It was a simple white satin frock, very plain and
very girlish, and she wore a bunch of purple pansies
with it.”
“Ah-h-h!” Cleek’s
voice was full of relief, his eyes full of sparkle
and life. “Then she did not wear
a gown of some soft, gauzy pink material, eh?
An airy sort of gown trimmed at the hem with scalloped
embroidery of rose-coloured silk. Good!
Can you remember any lady to-night that did?”
“Yes,” said Narkom promptly.
“Miss Ailsa Lorne did. She wore some soft,
gauzy pink stuff chiffon, I think I’ve
heard the wife call it with a lot of rose-coloured
silk stitchery on the edges of the flounces, and she
had a band of pink ribbon in her hair.”
Cleek made no comment, nor did his
countenance betray even the slightest trace of emotion.
He simply put the shut hand that held that gauzy pink
fragment into his pocket and shoved it far down out
of sight.
A while ago he could have sworn that
Ailsa Lorne’s foot had never crossed the threshold
of this house of crime; now he knew that it had, and
if the evidence of this scrap of chiffon stood for
anything, crossed it after she had left Clavering
Close after she had heard that threat against
the Count de Louvisan’s life.